User:Jeremy Delaney/sandbox

The Devil's Tea Table, is a prominent landmark near Warsaw Road on Route 29. The Devil’s Tea Table is a distinctive rock formation consisting of a horizontal stone slab that sits upon a 12-foot-high stone slab.

The privately owned Devil’s Tea Table has been a popular partying place for young people, (some of whom off the the cliff). It is the focal point of a series of bluffs that contain several geological features of interest, such as the type localities for van Houghton cycles, as well as the type sections for units of the Locatong and Passaic Formations of the Triassic. These bluffs are a regional scenic attraction and are admired by many tourists who float by on the adjacent Delaware River [1,2,3,4]. Geological lithologies include: argillite, siltstone, claystone, and mudstone.

[0] "Preserved Kingwood Farm a Peaceful Place Near A Devil of a Neighbor"

[1] https://www.theoutbound.com/new-jersey/hiking/hike-to-the-devil-s-tea-table

[2] https://www.lowerdelawarewildandscenic.org/index.php/devil-s-tt-full-article

[3] http://www.wolfenotes.com/2013/11/devils-tea-table-a-fine-ramble/

[4] https://www.hunterdonlandtrust.org/2020/03/09/preserved-kingwood-farm-a-peaceful-place-near-a-devil-of-a-neighbor/